Since she's now drivable (woooohoooo!) I can finally get back to doing upgrades. I'd planned to put a bench seat up front, tying the mounting for it and the harnesses into the cage. I finally got around to testfitting the bench -- got one from a mid-70's pickup, and, dammit, there's no way it'll fit.
It actually looks okay in this pic, but the bench is friggin hooge, and there's no way it'll mount to the cage. I could try a smaller bench seat, but after fiddling with it, I really couldn't find much wrong with the existing buckets.
I'll keep the buckets then, and just mount them to the cage. I started on the cage mounts today:
The angle is weird so it's a bit of an optical illusion; the bars are the same height in the center. (The front runner has to rise up over the tranny hump.)
Sticking with the buckets also means I could do a console between them, so I have some options.
The factory brackets are too tall to mount to the cage, and I'd have to chop them all to hell to keep the factory sliding mechanism. Plus that's only on the driver's side; the passenger side only flips forward on this era trucks and has no actual adjustment
I am hoping to fab up some sliding tracks that are low enough profile to fit. Rather than a spring-loaded lever arrangement like the factory, I'm thinking of just a series of holes drilled to allow multiple positions. I then bolt the seat into the preferred position, but it can move for other drivers or if I change my mind later. Could even set it up to allow for some vertical adjustment, ooh!
More pix to come when I get the seat brackets done up, and then the cage will come out in the next week or so, weld up the seat mounts, prolly a crossbar for the harness shoulder pieces, and some other assorted tweaks (including, say, a new coat of paint!)
-- A
It actually looks okay in this pic, but the bench is friggin hooge, and there's no way it'll mount to the cage. I could try a smaller bench seat, but after fiddling with it, I really couldn't find much wrong with the existing buckets.
I'll keep the buckets then, and just mount them to the cage. I started on the cage mounts today:
The angle is weird so it's a bit of an optical illusion; the bars are the same height in the center. (The front runner has to rise up over the tranny hump.)
Sticking with the buckets also means I could do a console between them, so I have some options.
The factory brackets are too tall to mount to the cage, and I'd have to chop them all to hell to keep the factory sliding mechanism. Plus that's only on the driver's side; the passenger side only flips forward on this era trucks and has no actual adjustment

I am hoping to fab up some sliding tracks that are low enough profile to fit. Rather than a spring-loaded lever arrangement like the factory, I'm thinking of just a series of holes drilled to allow multiple positions. I then bolt the seat into the preferred position, but it can move for other drivers or if I change my mind later. Could even set it up to allow for some vertical adjustment, ooh!

More pix to come when I get the seat brackets done up, and then the cage will come out in the next week or so, weld up the seat mounts, prolly a crossbar for the harness shoulder pieces, and some other assorted tweaks (including, say, a new coat of paint!)
-- A
so that it would mount to the floor okay but not the cage.
Now now.

Doesn't really matter why.
)
) and you can see feet tacked in the back. These bolt into the factory seatbelt holes, and are another point for the cage to attach to the body. The two bolts at the front bolt into the holes for the factory console. It's not at all a structural mount, but it may keep the sheetmetal from vibrating some, and it's a handy reference point for me to measure from.

